This week’s fresh listings:

 

This page is to be updated every Tuesday and will contain all the latest Coin, Medal & Token listings for that particular week.

 

The more observant of you may have realised that I no longer keep previous "Fresh Listings" coins on this page. 

All for sale coins can be found via the category grid on the front page.  Most sold coins are now accessible via a new link on that same category grid.

 

 

Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com for week commencing Tuesday 31st March 2026

 

 

Some ancient and hammered gold for your consideration this week:

 

 

WAu-9294:  1594 James VI Scottish Hammered Gold Rider.  Seventh coinage, pre accession - circulated at 100 shillings.  Initial mark Quatrefoil, pellets by the 1594 date.  Obverse: the king in armour with a sword, on a galloping horse, right; reverse: crowned shield.  SCBI 58, 1278ff; B4, fig.954, S.R.5458.  Good provenance with a great amount of tickets.  Minor marks to the left of the shield otherwise a nicely toned VF grade.  We note the March 2026 Davisson's auction example of similar date rarity achieved a hammer price of US $9,500 with associated add-ons.  The coin on offer here is of comparable grade and, unlike the Davisson example, actually has its front legs prominently on view!  £6,950

Provenance:

Old ticket, marked at £1,750 reduced to £1,500

ex Baldwin, November 2012, ticket market at £3,500, sold to...

ex William N. Clarke collection, many tickets

 

WAu-9295:  1602 James VI Scottish Hammered Gold Half Sword and Sceptre.  Eighth coinage, pre accession - circulated at 60 shillings.  Initial mark Quatrefoil.  Obverse: crowned arms; reverse: crossed sword and sceptre, crown above with thistles at the sides.  SCBI 35, 1198-9, same reverse die, S.R.5462.  The half sword & sceptres are more difficult to source, thus rarer, than the full sword & sceptres.  Good provenance with a great amount of tickets.  Slightly wavy flan (could easily be sorted), toned and about VF grade.  £2,350

Provenance:

ex Sovereign Rarities, ticket market at £1,300, sold to...

ex William N. Clarke collection, many tickets

 

WAu-9296:  Henry VII Tudor Hammered Gold Angel.  Type III with new dies - the angel has both feet on the dragon.  Initial mark Anchor, 1499 - 1502.  The angel, which circulated at 6s.8d, was a medieval coin but under this first Tudor monarch, was restyled with St Michael - about to symbolically thrust the devil into the pit - no longer adorned with feathers, rather clad in armour of Renaissance style.  S.R.2183.  £2,325

Provenance:

A field find from around the Horncastle / Skegness area of Eastern England.

 

WAu-9297:  Celtic Britain Gold Stater - Trinovantes: Addedomaros.  Full gold stater: Crossed Wreath type with a reverse horse, facing right, a wheel below, A DOM above and an annulet with pellet (clogged dies) below that.  Originally occupying an area around their main centre of Colchester, they were neighbours of the Catuvellauni tribe - their base being around St Albans - and later appeared to have amalgamated under the control of the Cunobelin.  S.R.200, circa late first century BC.  Old tickets here.  An absolutely outstanding piece of artwork, in gold, from well before AD43 when the Romans invaded these shores.  £1,875

Provenance:

ex D. Palm collection - his white ticket where he incorrectly attributes this as a "silver" stater

ex Tim Owen - early ticket with plain reverse

 

WAu-9298:  Celtic Britain Gold Stater - Corieltauvi - Kite Type.  Early uninscribed full gold stater, mid to late first century BC.  Obverse: a very crude laureate head, regularly seen on all Corieltauvi types as little more than a plain surface.  The reverse depicts a wonderfully stylised and disjointed Celtic horse, facing left, with a trefoil of pellets before the hind legs and the trademark kite, containing a quatrefoil of pellets, above.  S.R.392.  Formally known as the Coritani, this tribe occupied Lincolnshire and Nottinghamshire, up to Yorkshire, down the Leicestershire and even into Northamptonshire.  The South Ferriby type (S.R.390) is the one that nearly always turns up so this Kite type, although not really being reflected as such in Sovereign Rarities, is much the rarer variety.  Old tickets here.  An absolutely outstanding piece of artwork, in gold, from well before AD43 when the Romans invaded these shores.  £945

Provenance:

ex Andy Gillis collection

ex Mike Vosper

ex Gentleman Collector - his very old looking ticket which would appear to date Messrs Gillis & Vosper rather harshly!